15 research outputs found
Disks around massive young stellar objects: are they common?
We present K-band polarimetric images of several massive young stellar
objects at resolutions 0.1-0.5 arcsec. The polarization vectors around
these sources are nearly centro-symmetric, indicating they are dominating the
illumination of each field. Three out of the four sources show elongated
low-polarization structures passing through the centers, suggesting the
presence of polarization disks. These structures and their surrounding
reflection nebulae make up bipolar outflow/disk systems, supporting the
collapse/accretion scenario as their low-mass siblings. In particular, S140
IRS1 show well defined outflow cavity walls and a polarization disk which
matches the direction of previously observed equatorial disk wind, thus
confirming the polarization disk is actually the circumstellar disk. To date, a
dozen massive protostellar objects show evidence for the existence of disks;
our work add additional samples around MYSOs equivalent to early B-type stars.Comment: 9 pages, including 2 figures, 1 table, to appear on ApJ
The circumstellar disk, envelope, and bi-polar outflow of the Massive Young Stellar Object W33A
The Young Stellar Object (YSO) W33A is one of the best known examples of a
massive star still in the process of forming. Here we present Gemini North
ALTAIR/NIFS laser-guide star adaptive-optics assisted K-band integral-field
spectroscopy of W33A and its inner reflection nebula. In our data we make the
first detections of a rotationally-flattened outer envelope and fast bi-polar
jet of a massive YSO at near-infrared wavelengths. The predominant spectral
features observed are Br-gamma, H_2, and a combination of emission and
absorption from CO gas. We perform a 3-D spectro-astrometric analysis of the
line emission, the first study of its kind. We find that the object's Br-gamma
emission reveals evidence for a fast bi-polar jet on sub-milliarcsecond scales,
which is aligned with the larger-scale outflow. The hybrid CO features can be
explained as a combination of hot CO emission arising in a disk close to the
central star, while cold CO absorption originates in the cooler outer envelope.
Kinematic analysis of these features reveals that both structures are rotating,
and consistent with being aligned perpendicularly to both the ionised jet and
the large-scale outflow. Assuming Keplerian rotation, we find that the
circumstellar disk orbits a central mass of >10Msun, while the outer envelope
encloses a mass of ~15Msun. Our results suggest a scenario of a central star
accreting material from a circumstellar disk at the centre of a cool extended
rotating torus, while driving a fast bi-polar wind. These results therefore
provide strong supporting evidence for the hypothesis that the formation
mechanism for high-mass stars is qualitatively similar to that of low-mass
stars.Comment: 13 pages, 18 figs. Accepted for publication in MNRA
An equatorial wind from the massive young stellar object S140 IRS 1
The discovery of the second equatorial ionized stellar wind from a massive
young stellar object is reported. High resolution radio continuum maps of S140
IRS 1 reveal a highly elongated source that is perpendicular to the larger
scale bipolar molecular outflow. This picture is confirmed by location of a
small scale monopolar near-IR reflection nebula at the base of the blueshifted
lobe. A second epoch of observations over a five year baseline show little
ordered outward proper motion of clumps as would have been expected for a jet.
A third epoch, taken only 50 days after the second, did show significant
changes in the radio morphology. These radio properties can all be understood
in the context of an equatorial wind driven by radiation pressure from the
central star and inner disc acting on the gas in the surface layers of the disc
as proposed by Drew et al. (1998). This equatorial wind system is briefly
compared with the one in S106IR, and contrasted with other massive young
stellar objects that drive ionized jets.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJ, minor changes in light of
referees repor
The RMS Survey: Critical Tests of Accretion Models for the Formation of Massive Stars
There is currently no accepted theoretical framework for the formation of the
most massive stars, and the manner in which protostars continue to accrete and
grow in mass beyond \sim10Msun is still a controversial topic. In this study we
use several prescriptions of stellar accretion and a description of the
Galactic gas distribution to simulate the luminosities and spatial distribution
of massive protostellar population of the Galaxy. We then compare the
observables of each simulation to the results of the Red MSX Source (RMS)
survey, a recently compiled database of massive young stellar objects. We find
that the observations are best matched by accretion rates which increase as the
protostar grows in mass, such as those predicted by the turbulent core and
competitive accretion (i.e. Bondi-Hoyle) models. These 'accelerating accretion'
models provide very good qualitative and quantitative fits to the data, though
we are unable to distinguish between these two models on our simulations alone.
We rule out models with accretion rates which are constant with time, and those
which are initially very high and which fall away with time, as these produce
results which are quantitatively and/or qualitatively incompatible with the
observations. To simultaneously match the low- and high-luminosity YSO
distribution we require the inclusion of a 'swollen-star' pre-main-sequence
phase, the length of which is well-described by the Kelvin-Helmholz timescale.
Our results suggest that the lifetime of the YSO phase is \sim 10^5yrs, whereas
the compact Hii-region phase lasts between \sim 2 - 4 \times 10^5yrs depending
on the final mass of the star. Finally, the absolute numbers of YSOs are best
matched by a globally averaged star-formation rate for the Galaxy of
1.5-2Msun/yr.Comment: 22 pages, 24 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA